Corrosion Deterioration of Steel in Cracked SHCC

Abstract The presence of cracks is unavoidable in reinforced concrete structures and also a gateway for chloride into concrete, leading to corrosion of steel reinforcing bars. So, crack control, crack width limitation and chloride threshold levels are well-established concepts in durability of reinf...

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Main Authors: Suvash Chandra Paul, Gideon Pieter Adriaan Greeff van Zijl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-09-01
Series:International Journal of Concrete Structures and Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40069-017-0205-8
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spelling doaj-e5e85238b9554470874968870c66443c2020-11-25T00:50:51ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Concrete Structures and Materials1976-04852234-13152017-09-0111355757210.1007/s40069-017-0205-8Corrosion Deterioration of Steel in Cracked SHCCSuvash Chandra Paul0Gideon Pieter Adriaan Greeff van Zijl1Singapore Centre for 3D Printing, School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Nanyang Technological UniversityDepartment of Civil Engineering, Stellenbosch UniversityAbstract The presence of cracks is unavoidable in reinforced concrete structures and also a gateway for chloride into concrete, leading to corrosion of steel reinforcing bars. So, crack control, crack width limitation and chloride threshold levels are well-established concepts in durability of reinforced concrete structures. This paper reports on accelerated chloride-induced corrosion in cracked reinforced strain-hardening cement-based composites and reinforced mortar beams, both in loaded and unloaded states. Corrosion rates are monitored and loss of mass and yield force, as well as corrosion pitting depth in steel bars are reported. The chloride content at different depths in specimens is also determined through XRF, and through chemical testing of acid and water soluble chloride content by titration. Finally, different relationships are drawn between crack properties, mass loss, yield force, corroded depth and chloride levels at the steel surface for different cover depths. It is found that the crack spacing and free chloride at the steel surface level are best correlated to the corrosion damage in the specimens.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40069-017-0205-8chloridecorrosioncrackssteel yield forcepitting depthmass loss
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Suvash Chandra Paul
Gideon Pieter Adriaan Greeff van Zijl
spellingShingle Suvash Chandra Paul
Gideon Pieter Adriaan Greeff van Zijl
Corrosion Deterioration of Steel in Cracked SHCC
International Journal of Concrete Structures and Materials
chloride
corrosion
cracks
steel yield force
pitting depth
mass loss
author_facet Suvash Chandra Paul
Gideon Pieter Adriaan Greeff van Zijl
author_sort Suvash Chandra Paul
title Corrosion Deterioration of Steel in Cracked SHCC
title_short Corrosion Deterioration of Steel in Cracked SHCC
title_full Corrosion Deterioration of Steel in Cracked SHCC
title_fullStr Corrosion Deterioration of Steel in Cracked SHCC
title_full_unstemmed Corrosion Deterioration of Steel in Cracked SHCC
title_sort corrosion deterioration of steel in cracked shcc
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of Concrete Structures and Materials
issn 1976-0485
2234-1315
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Abstract The presence of cracks is unavoidable in reinforced concrete structures and also a gateway for chloride into concrete, leading to corrosion of steel reinforcing bars. So, crack control, crack width limitation and chloride threshold levels are well-established concepts in durability of reinforced concrete structures. This paper reports on accelerated chloride-induced corrosion in cracked reinforced strain-hardening cement-based composites and reinforced mortar beams, both in loaded and unloaded states. Corrosion rates are monitored and loss of mass and yield force, as well as corrosion pitting depth in steel bars are reported. The chloride content at different depths in specimens is also determined through XRF, and through chemical testing of acid and water soluble chloride content by titration. Finally, different relationships are drawn between crack properties, mass loss, yield force, corroded depth and chloride levels at the steel surface for different cover depths. It is found that the crack spacing and free chloride at the steel surface level are best correlated to the corrosion damage in the specimens.
topic chloride
corrosion
cracks
steel yield force
pitting depth
mass loss
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40069-017-0205-8
work_keys_str_mv AT suvashchandrapaul corrosiondeteriorationofsteelincrackedshcc
AT gideonpieteradriaangreeffvanzijl corrosiondeteriorationofsteelincrackedshcc
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